Thursday, January 17, 2013

Tassels latkans hangings we at ranjanaarts are manufacturers of all type of designer tassels latkans hangings , we make these tassels latkans hangings from different materials and in different patterns

Tassels latkans
hangings we at
ranjanaarts are manufacturers
of all type of
designer tassels latkans
hangings , we make
these tassels latkans
hangings from different
materials and in
different patterns

We ranjanaarts
manufacturer these tassels
latkans hangings from different
materials and different
themes , we do make
customize tassels latkans
and hangings too ,
these tassels latkans
hangings we make them
in different colors
style and by
using unique materials
and color combo ,

We also teach
how to make different
type of tassels latkans
hangings , decorative
tassels latkans hangings
are designed in
most unique ways
to suit different
applications small tassels latkans
hangings are used in motive
decorations , medium
latkans tassels hangings
are used for decorating
sarees , bags
, apparels

The word "tassel" comes from theLatin"tassau", which
refers to aclasp(as for the neck of a garment).

Circa 1406 B.C.

38...Tell them to make tassels on the corners of their
garments throughout their generations, and to put a blue thread in the tassels
of the corners.39And you shall have the tassel, that
you may look upon it and remember all thecommandmentsof
the LORD and do them, and that you may not follow the harlotry to which your
own heart and your own eyes are inclined,40and that you may remember and do all
My commandments, and be holy for your God.Numbers
15:38-40 (NKJ).[1]

In theWest,
tassels were originally a series of windings of thread or string around a
suspending string until the desired curvature was attained. Decades later,
turned wooden moulds, which were either covered in simple wrappings or much
more elaborate coverings called "satinings", were used. This involved
an intricate binding of bands of filament silk vertically around the mould by
means of an internal "lacing" in the bore of the mould.

These constructions were varied and augmented
with extensive ornamentations that were each assigned an idiosyncratic term by
theirFrenchpractitioners.
In France those practitioners
were called "Passementiers", and anapprenticeshipof seven years was required to become
a master in one of the subdivisions of the guild. The French widely exported
their very artistic work, and at such low prices that no other nation developed
a mature "trimmings" industry. Tassels and their associated forms
changed style throughout the years, from the small and casual ofRenaissancedesigns,
through the medium sizes and more staid designs of the Empire period, and to
theVictorian Erawith the largest and most elaborate.
Some of these designs are returning today from the European and American
artisans who may charge a thousand dollars for a single hand-made tassel.

Tassels (also called tufts) were traditionally
worn byOxfordandCambridgeUniversity undergraduates on their
caps (hence a slang word - tassel for an undergraduate), those wearing gold
tassels were those who had paid for the status of "gentleman-commoner",
thus receiving increased social prestige and more luxurious accommodation than
ordinary commoners who wore plain black tassels on their caps.[2]Today,
only the Chancellor of Oxford wears a gold tassel.[3]

In the Middle East, tassels were worn as
talismans, especially on headwear. In Egypt, Mesopotamia, and throughout the
Arab world tassels were worn by children on hoods or caps to protect them from
malevolent spirits and ward off demons.[4]

Tassels, orliripipes, are also found onmortarboardsduring
university graduation ceremonies and possibly upon the shoes of the graduates
at the ceremony. Near the conclusion of the graduation ceremony the tassel that
hangs from the graduate's mortarboard is moved from the right to the left.
Typically the entire graduating class does this in unison.[citation needed]

A tassel is made by bindingplaitedor otherwise gatheredthreadsfrom which at one end protrudes acordon
which the tassel is hung, and which may have loose, dangling threads at the
other end. Tassels are normally decorative elements, and as such one often
finds them attached, usually along the bottomhem,
togarments,curtains,pastiescovering
the nipples ofburlesqueperformers,
or other hangings.

A tassel is primarily an ornament, and was at
first the casual termination of a cord to prevent unraveling with a knot. As
time went on, various peoples developed variations on this, until by the 16th
century inFrancethe
first Guild of Passementiers was created and documented the art ofpassementerie. The tassel was its primary
expression, but it also includedfringes(applied,
as opposed to integral), ornamental cords,galloons,pompons,rosettes,
andgimpsas
other forms. Tassels, pompons, and rosettes arepointornaments; the others are
linear ornaments.